Images and the Making of the Russian Empire, 1471-1721

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16th century
17th century
18th century
A01=Valerie A. Kivelson
Author_Valerie A. Kivelson
Category=AFJ
Category=NHD
Category=NHTB
Category=NHTQ
colonial history
colonized
conquest
cultural hostilities
diversity
early modern history
empathy
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
hunters
Illustrated Historical Chronicle
imperialism
kinship
metropole
Muscovites
non-Russians
otter
race
racialized thinking
reception
regime
reindeer
Russian history
Siberia
subjects
Tatars
trappers
tsar
tsardom
Ukraine
visual culture
visual demographics
visual history

Product details

  • ISBN 9781350516496
  • Weight: 660g
  • Dimensions: 160 x 236mm
  • Publication Date: 16 Oct 2025
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Exploring the visual record of the Muscovite tsardom, this book demonstrates that, in imperial settings, images actually do things.

Richly illustrated with 120 arresting, little-known images, it considers how those images functioned as active agents for and against empire. Images and the Making of the Russian Empire moves out from the throne room of the Kremlin to engravers’ workshops of Chernihiv and Kyiv, to the Amur River basin, to the icy peaks of Kamchatka, wherever imagery and empire intersected – which was everywhere.

The book presents an unexpected array of pictorial material, including Muscovite illuminated histories, Ukrainian political-theological prints, and Siberian reindeer herders’ pictographic signature marks. Valerie A. Kivelson demonstrates how pictures created by conquerors and conquered, by elites and subjects, by the powerful and the disempowered, advanced and shaped the tsardom as it grew into an ethnically and religiously diverse empire, in ways that have remained unnoticed until now. Through its novel visual methodology, it offers original perspectives on both Moscow’s ambitions and the ways in which populations coming under tsarist control pushed back and reshaped the regime’s own understanding of what it meant to be an imperial state.

Valerie A. Kivelson is Arthur F. Thurnau Professor of History and Thomas N. Tentler Collegiate Professor at the University of Michigan, USA. She is the author of Russia’s Empires (2016; with Ronald Suny), Cartographies of Tsardom: The Land and Its Meanings in Seventeenth-Century Russia (2006) and Desperate Magic: The Moral Economy of Witchcraft in Seventeenth-Century Russia (2013). She is also the co-editor of Russian Empire (2023; with Joan Neuberger and Sergei Kozlov) and Picturing Russia (2008; with Joan Neuberger).

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